UBER Institutional Ownership Map: $144.8B Across Tracked 13F Holders

Marcus Chen

UBER had $144.8B of tracked institutional value in 2025Q4. This research map breaks down top holders, concentration, and portfolio-weight signals.

UBER Institutional Ownership in One Read

UBER TECHNOLOGIES INC had $144.8B of tracked institutional value in the latest 2025Q4 holder map, with the largest disclosed holders led by VANGUARD GROUP INC, BlackRock, Inc., and Capital Research Global Investors. This research piece is not about a single headline. It is a holder-depth map: who owns the stock, how concentrated the top group is, and whether the largest holders look like broad-market anchors or active allocators.

That distinction matters for retail investors. A stock can have a large institutional value total because passive index funds own it at scale, because active growth managers have built meaningful positions, or because wealth platforms and banks hold it across client accounts. The holder map for UBER gives investors a cleaner starting point than a price chart alone.

UBER Top Institutional Holders — 2025Q4 ($B)

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Top Holder Table

FilerReported valueSharesWeight in filer portfolio
VANGUARD GROUP INC$15.7B192,499,6020.2280%
BlackRock, Inc.$12.6B154,770,6020.2138%
Capital Research Global Investors$9.3B113,456,3761.7113%
STATE STREET CORP$7.4B90,908,7490.2492%
MORGAN STANLEY$6.6B80,196,9240.3912%
PUBLIC INVESTMENT FUND$6.0B72,840,54145.9690%
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC$3.9B47,936,2030.2411%
FMR LLC$2.6B31,563,9230.1315%

The top-holder table shows two different signals. The reported value column tells you who has the biggest dollar exposure to UBER. The portfolio-weight column tells you whether the position is meaningful inside that filer’s own book. A mega-filer can own billions of dollars and still have the stock represent less than 1% of its portfolio, while a smaller active manager can show a higher internal weight with less absolute value.

UBER Top 10 Holders vs Rest — 2025Q4

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Concentration Check

The concentration chart separates the top ten holders from the rest of the tracked base. For UBER, the top ten account for 47.7% of tracked institutional value, leaving 52.3% outside the largest lines. That spread is important because it helps investors avoid confusing top-holder scale with ownership fragility. When the rest-of-holder base remains substantial, the stock is less dependent on one filer’s next 13F.

The largest names in this map include VANGUARD GROUP INC BlackRock, Inc. Capital Research Global Investors STATE STREET CORP MORGAN STANLEY PUBLIC INVESTMENT FUND. Some are broad market institutions, some are active managers, and some are platform-style holders. The correct read is not “all institutions agree.” The correct read is that UBER sits in a deep enough holder base to support several different investment mandates at once.

UBER Holder Portfolio Weight — Top 8

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Weight Matters More Than Rank

The third chart ranks the same holder set by each filer’s own portfolio weight. This is where the research becomes more useful. If VANGUARD GROUP INC is the largest dollar holder but the position is a small percentage of its book, investors should treat it as structural exposure. If another filer has a smaller dollar position but a higher internal weight, that line may deserve more attention in follow-up research.

For a practical workflow, compare UBER against peer stock pages after each quarterly filing. If the same active managers are increasing weights across related names, the signal is stronger. If the holder map is dominated by index-like owners with little portfolio-weight change, the filing is still useful, but it speaks more to market structure than active conviction.

What to Watch Next

  • The next 13F filing cycle after 2025Q4, using share-count changes rather than headlines.
  • Whether active managers rise in the holder ranking or passive holders remain the main story.
  • Changes in the portfolio-weight column, especially among non-index holders.
  • Peer comparisons with AAPL, MSFT, NVDA, and GOOGL where relevant.

The bottom line: the UBER holder map is a screening tool. It does not say the stock must go up or down. It tells investors which institutions have exposure, how much of the tracked value is concentrated in the top group, and where to look when the next quarter’s 13F filings arrive.

Reading the Map Without Overclaiming

The most useful conclusion is deliberately modest. The latest 13F holder map for UBER shows where institutional exposure sat as of the 2025Q4 reporting period; it does not reveal trades made after the quarter closed, intraday hedges, short positions, or economic exposure outside reportable long positions. That limitation is not a weakness if investors use the data correctly. Treat the map as a baseline. When the next filing cycle arrives, compare share counts, holder ranks, and portfolio weights against this baseline before making a judgment about accumulation or distribution.

That workflow is especially important for stocks held by broad institutions. A large reported value from an index-oriented filer may be durable but not expressive. A smaller line from an active manager may be more informative if the position has a high internal weight or rises across consecutive quarters. The best signal appears when holder depth, active-manager participation, and share-count direction all point the same way.

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